Arab Times

1st baby born from 3-parent technique

Boy healthy, doing well

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MIAMI, Sept 28, (AFP): The world’s first baby has been born using a controvers­ial new technique by US scientists to include DNA from three parents in the embryo, said a report Tuesday.

The baby boy was born five months ago in Mexico to Jordanian parents, and is healthy and doing well, said the report in New Scientist magazine, described as an “exclusive.”

The boy’s mother carried genes for a disorder known as Leigh Syndrome, a fatal nervous system disorder which she had passed on to her two previous children who both died of the disease. She had also suffered four miscarriag­es. The woman, whose identity was withheld by New Scientist, and her husband sought the help of John Zhang, a doctor from the New Hope Fertility Center in New York City to have a baby that would be geneticall­y related to them but would not carry the inherited disease.

The United States has not approved any three-parent method for fertility purposes, so Zhang went to Mexico where he was quoted by New Scientist as saying “there are no rules.” One method that has been approved in the United Kingdom, called pronuclear transfer, was deemed unacceptab­le to the couple because it would involve the destructio­n of two embryos, said the report.

Since the mother carried the genes for the disease in her mitochondr­ia, or DNA that is passed down from the maternal side, Zhang used her nuclear DNA and combined it with mitochondr­ia from an egg donor, in a technique known as spindle nuclear transfer.

“He removed the nucleus from one of the mother’s eggs and inserted it into a donor egg that had had its own nucleus removed,” said the report.

“The resulting egg — with nuclear DNA from the mother and mitochondr­ial DNA from a donor — was then fertilized with the father’s sperm.”

Zhang and his team are expected to describe their method at the American Society for Reproducti­ve Medicine meeting in Salt Lake City, Utah, next month.

An abstract describing the research has been published in the journal Fertility and Sterility, but outside experts said much more remains to be understood about the research.

“As this technology is controvers­ial and a world first, I think the investigat­ors should have submitted a manuscript for full peer review instead of announcing these outcomes in this manner,” said Justin St John, professor and Director of the Centre for Genetic Diseases at Monash University.

Attempts began in the 1990s to create a baby by injecting mitochondr­ial DNA from a donor into the mother’s egg, and adding sperm from her partner.

“Some of the babies went on to develop genetic disorders, and the technique was banned,” said the New Scientist report.

“The problem may have arisen from the babies having mitochondr­ia from two sources.”

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